The story is the following (without entering it too much details). A certain agreement is being negotiated which would give very significant powers to private companies against a country's governement and its people. Big companies could sue governments if certain laws are passed which would reduce their profits! This is completely evil in my view and a pure attack on democracy, and I decided to take some action by sharing the news and the knowledge I have, so that other people are aware of what is going on.

Now one of them said something along the line "Well, I agree this is evil, but it is prophesied in the holy book of my religion, so I won't take action against it. And my holy book says there is even worse to come!"

I found that shocking... I try my best to respect all religions, but this was really demanding a lot from me. It's like using one's religion/beliefs for letting evil being committed. Personally, I find that attitude to be bordering on evil itself.
I wish I am wrong, so please correct me...

Many Buddhist do the same thing. For example, I posted a video about why the world is heading towards a third world war (to preserve the incredible power and profit of International Bankers) and there were two broad responses, one that this was merely a 'conspiracy theory', and the other, that we are all going to die one day in any case, as if this is reason enough not to take action against a conflict which would kill billions of people, but would also render this beautiful, life-sustaining planet a mere shadow of it's former self. After all, the five khandhas are not-self, so why worry about the welfare of the physical environment we all live in? Except that, without a suitably habitable planet to actually live on, or a living human body, one cannot practice the Dhamma, either.

@manas: That also reminded me of Thai buddhist monks saying that prostitutes deserve their situation because of some bad kamma they accumulated in previous lives. And they even gladly accepts donations from brothels, as it will help these poor girls accumulate some merits to have a better next life! I think that a very similar line of reasoning, using beliefs to let evil actions unchecked...

puppha wrote:
@manas: That also reminded me of Thai buddhist monks saying that prostitutes deserve their situation because of some bad kamma they accumulated in previous lives. And they even gladly accepts donations from brothels, as it will help these poor girls accumulate some merits to have a better next life! I think that a very similar line of reasoning, using beliefs to let evil actions unchecked...

That sort of thing is a disgraceful distortion and misuse of the Buddha's teachings...appalling.

puppha wrote:
@manas: That also reminded me of Thai buddhist monks saying that prostitutes deserve their situation because of some bad kamma they accumulated in previous lives. And they even gladly accepts donations from brothels, as it will help these poor girls accumulate some merits to have a better next life! I think that a very similar line of reasoning, using beliefs to let evil actions unchecked...

That sort of thing is a disgraceful distortion and misuse of the Buddha's teachings...appalling.

I'd be wary of general statements attributed to "X Buddhist Monks", without any detail or context. A slightly different telling of the story would give a completely different impression.

@manas: That also reminded me of Thai buddhist monks saying that prostitutes deserve their situation because of some bad kamma they accumulated in previous lives. And they even gladly accepts donations from brothels, as it will help these poor girls accumulate some merits to have a better next life! I think that a very similar line of reasoning, using beliefs to let evil actions unchecked...

Viscid wrote:Religions don't require your respect. If you can provide a good argument for taking action, then do so, confidently. Offend people, if necessary. Reason trumps dogma and shallow superstition.

I have to say I agree with you. I think staying silent for the sake of political correctness is unskillful.

mikenz66 wrote:I'd be wary of general statements attributed to "X Buddhist Monks", without any detail or context. A slightly different telling of the story would give a completely different impression.

I have seen similar stories many times. You can just have a look at "Broken Buddha" from Ven Dhammika; what he exposes is actually even worse than what I mentioned.

Freaky... And unfortunately very real...
However, there is a difference here in the sense that they actively support evil actions.
In my situation, the guy was not taking action either way.

I think I can formulate what's going on inside that twisted mind: "I agree it's evil, but according to my beliefs it's all going according to plan, so I will do nothing against it."
After pondering it, I think either the reasoning or the beliefs are "mildly" evil in such a case.